Real-Life ‘Catch Me If You Can’: Former Steward Faces 20 Years for Posing as Pilot to Score Free Flights

Screenshot 2026-01-23 at 9.28.29 AM

By Lions Roar International Desk

HONOLULU, HAWAII (Friday, January 23, 2026) — In a case drawing immediate comparisons to the famous Frank Abagnale Jr. story, a 33-year-old Canadian man is facing federal charges in Hawaii after allegedly posing as a pilot to fly for free across the globe for four years.

Dallas Pokornik, a former flight attendant from Toronto, allegedly used a forged employee ID and his intimate knowledge of airline protocols to con his way into cockpits and cabin seats on hundreds of flights.


✈️ The “Jumpseat” Con

Prosecutors allege that Pokornik’s scam was sophisticated, relying on the professional courtesy often extended between airline staff.

  • Insider Knowledge: Having worked as a steward for a Toronto-based airline from 2017 to 2019, Pokornik knew exactly how to speak the “language” of flight crews.
  • The Fake ID: He reportedly used a counterfeit airline employee ID card to bypass security and gate agents.
  • The High-Stakes Ask: Pokornik frequently requested the “jumpseat”—a fold-out seat in the cockpit usually reserved for off-duty pilots, trainees, or safety inspectors. By sitting in the cockpit, he avoided the paper trail associated with traditional passenger manifests.

⚖️ The Charges and Legal Fallout

While the scam reportedly spanned four years and three major airlines, the current federal case centers on two specific incidents involving Hawaiian Airlines.

  1. August 16, 2024: Allegedly cheated his way onto a flight using wire fraud.
  2. October 28, 2024: A second incident that ultimately led to his detection.

Pokornik has been charged with two counts of wire fraud. If convicted in Hawaii’s federal court, the stakes are incredibly high:

  • Prison Time: Up to 20 years in federal prison.
  • Financial Penalty: A fine of up to US$250,000 (approx. $427,000 NZD).

📊 Profile of the Imposter: Dallas Pokornik

DetailInformation
Age / Origin33, Toronto, Canada
Former ProfessionFlight Attendant (2017–2019)
Alleged MethodFake ID & Pilot Impersonation
Primary TargetCockpit Jumpseats
Maximum Penalty20 Years Imprisonment

🛡️ Security Breached

The case has sent ripples through the aviation industry, raising serious questions about how a former steward could bypass post-9/11 security protocols for nearly half a decade. Airlines are now reportedly reviewing their “jumpseat” authorization procedures and employee ID verification systems to ensure that “insider knowledge” cannot be weaponized again.

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